I wanted to share the info found on the RPG.net site regarding Elemental Evil. I give you the bibliographical references:
The Forgotten Temple of Tharizdun (1982)
The Temple of Elemental Evil (1985)
The Temple of Elemental Evil novel (2001) by T.M. Reid
The Temple of Elemental Evil electronic game (2003) Troika Games
Dragon Magazine #343 - Princes of Elemental Evil (1986) (and AD&D1 Fiend Folio)
Return to the Temple of Elemental Evil (2001) by Monte Cook
Dungeon Magazine #192 - Creature Incarnations: Abyssal Plague Demons (2011) by Michael E Shea
Dungeon Magazine #197 - Creature Incarnations: Abyssal Plague Epic Threats (2011) by Michael E Shea
Dungeon Magazine #214 - The Elder Elemental Eye (2013) by Peter Sleijpen & Chris Sims
Dungeon Magazine #221 - The Battle of Emridy Meadows (2013)
Dragon Magazine #423 - The Inn of the Welcome Wench (2013)
Dragon Magazine #425 - Elemental Evil (2013) by Steve Winter
Dragon Magazine #425 - The Temple of Elemental Evil by Skip Williams +++
Dragon Magazine #425 - The Anatomy of Elemental Evil by Thomas M Reid
Lair Assault - Into the Pit of Madness (2013) (final d&d 4th edition Lair Assault) by Robert J Schwalb
Princes of the Apocalypse (D&D5) (2015) by Richard Baker [Bio] , Ed Greenwood, Jeff Ludwig, David Noonan, Thomas M. Reid [Bio] , Stephen Schubert, Robert J. Schwalb [Bio] , Steve Townshend
Note @rasgon's remark that recalls the dates of Iuz's imprisonment, which means an agreement before 505 CY between Iuz and Zuggtmoy.
Good morning. I found two new items published in DRAGON/DUNGEON, which seem little known to me.
DUNGEON 212
HISTORY OF HOMMLET
In 1979, TSR, Inc. published a slim adventure entitled
T1, The Village of Hommlet. This adventure, like the
one in your hands, detailed a small farming village,
its inhabitants, and a nearby moathouse populated
by evil creatures.
Set in the venerable Greyhawk™ campaign world,
this adventure was originally intended as the first
part of a larger series of adventures that culminated
in the exploration of the newly repopulated Temple
of Elemental Evil. However, the temple didn’t see
print for six long years, when it was finally published
as part of a 128-page “super-adventure” named T1–4,
The Temple of Elemental Evil. This adventure included a
chapter that updated and revised The Village of Hom-
mlet (the original adventure), gathering the entire
storyline between two covers.
Over the years, Hommlet and the temple have
reappeared in a novel, computer game, and even
another super-adventure: Return to the Temple of
Elemental Evil (published in 2001 and set years after
the original adventure).
This adventure returns to the roots of the original
24-page adventure while also incorporating a few
elements from the 1985 expansion of the village and
updating the whole thing to the 4th Edition of the
D&D game. Here you’ll find Rufus and Burne, Elmo
and Lareth, and yes, even the giant frog
D&D Encounters: Against the Cult of Chaos
This adventure draws heavy inspiration from three D&D classic adventures: Keep on the Borderlands, The Village of Hommlet, and Against the Cult of the Reptile God.
The above reference strikes me as incorrect. There is no way that Dragon Mag #343 was published in 1986. I don't have the time to verify the content and actual year of publication... probably 2006 or 2007?
The above reference strikes me as incorrect. There is no way that Dragon Mag #343 was published in 1986. I don't have the time to verify the content and actual year of publication... probably 2006 or 2007?
I actually translate the OAR 6 ToEE from Goodman Games. A little disappointed. The end of the collaboration between WoTC and GG ? (I really liked the B4 which makes a very good scenario in the Sea of Dust).
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